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Posts by Modern Intellectual History

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📣 Announcing The 2026 Modern Intellectual History Lecture!

We're thrilled to welcome Prof. Marlene L. Daut (Yale) for her talk:

“The King of Haiti and Black Statecraft in the Nineteenth Century.”

📅 March 19, 2026
⏰ 2:15–3:45 PM CST
📍 Black Cultural Center Auditorium, Vanderbilt University

2 months ago 9 3 0 0
Post image

📣 Announcing The 2026 Modern Intellectual History Lecture!

We're thrilled to welcome Prof. Marlene L. Daut (Yale) for her talk:

“The King of Haiti and Black Statecraft in the Nineteenth Century.”

📅 March 19, 2026
⏰ 2:15–3:45 PM CST
📍 Black Cultural Center Auditorium, Vanderbilt University

2 months ago 9 3 0 0
Communication Theology, the Decolonization of Information, and the Africanization of Journalism, 1960–1990 | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core Communication Theology, the Decolonization of Information, and the Africanization of Journalism, 1960–1990

Now on FirstView: Ismay Milford examines communication theology, the decolonization of information, and the Africanization of journalism, 1960–1990

6 months ago 0 1 0 0
The Stories We Tell Ourselves about Peace and Genocide | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core The Stories We Tell Ourselves about Peace and Genocide

Now on FirstView: Camilla Boisen reflects on the stories we tell ourselves about peace and genocide in her review essay of A. Dirk Moses' @dirkmoses.bsky.social The Problems of Genocide and Lauren Benton's They Called It Peace: Worlds of Imperial Violence

2 months ago 4 3 0 0
Cugoano, Condorcet, and Abolition on the Eve of Revolution | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core Cugoano, Condorcet, and Abolition on the Eve of Revolution

Now on FirstView: Abolition on the eve of revolution? Jennifer Pitts and Michael F. Suarez, S.J., examine Condorcet’s French translation of Quobna Ottobah Cugoano’s influential antislavery treatise and analyze its reception in France

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Against the Caesarist Crowd: Georges Sorel's Early Democratic Socialism during the Dreyfus Affair | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core Against the Caesarist Crowd: Georges Sorel's Early Democratic Socialism during the Dreyfus Affair

Now on FirstView: Against the Caesarist crowd? Peter Giraudo analyzes Georges Sorel's early democratic socialism during the Dreyfus affair and his ideas on workers' dissociation from Parisian crowds as a necessary condition for socialist progress

2 months ago 3 1 0 0
Cugoano, Condorcet, and Abolition on the Eve of Revolution | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core Cugoano, Condorcet, and Abolition on the Eve of Revolution

Now on FirstView: Abolition on the eve of revolution? Jennifer Pitts and Michael F. Suarez, S.J., examine Condorcet’s French translation of Quobna Ottobah Cugoano’s influential antislavery treatise and analyze its reception in France

2 months ago 4 2 0 0
The Stories We Tell Ourselves about Peace and Genocide | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core The Stories We Tell Ourselves about Peace and Genocide

Now on FirstView: Camilla Boisen reflects on the stories we tell ourselves about peace and genocide in her review essay of A. Dirk Moses' @dirkmoses.bsky.social The Problems of Genocide and Lauren Benton's They Called It Peace: Worlds of Imperial Violence

2 months ago 4 3 0 0
Against the Caesarist Crowd: Georges Sorel's Early Democratic Socialism during the Dreyfus Affair | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core Against the Caesarist Crowd: Georges Sorel's Early Democratic Socialism during the Dreyfus Affair

Now on FirstView: Against the Caesarist crowd? Peter Giraudo analyzes Georges Sorel's early democratic socialism during the Dreyfus affair and his ideas on workers' dissociation from Parisian crowds as a necessary condition for socialist progress

2 months ago 3 1 0 0
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Civil Society Divided against Itself: The Fight for Shorter Hours in Antebellum America | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core Civil Society Divided against Itself: The Fight for Shorter Hours in Antebellum America

Now on FirstView: Civil society divided against itself? Pamela C. Nogales analyzes labor reformers' fights for shorter hours in antebellum U.S. and the transatlantic debates over a global "social republic"

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What Happened to New England Theology? | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core What Happened to New England Theology?

Now on FirstView: What happened to New England theology? Sam Gee analyzes the contemporary decline of scholarship on New England Theology and proposes a way forward for its study by going beyond evangelical readings of the sources

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Bringing Intellectual History into Dry Dock | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core Bringing Intellectual History into Dry Dock

Now on FirstView: Bringing intellectual history into dry dock? Nayeli L. Riano reflects on methods and intellectual history in her review essay of Javier Fernández-Sebastián’s Key Metaphors for History and Elías Palti’s Intellectual History and the Problem of Conceptual Change bit.ly/4q1wSas

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“A Valuable Man” and “One of the Wisest and Best of Mankind”: Jeremy Bentham, Edward Gibbon Wakefield, and Systematic Colonization | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core “A Valuable Man” and “One of the Wisest and Best of Mankind”: Jeremy Bentham, Edward Gibbon Wakefield, and Systematic Colonization

Now on FirstView: Jane Lydon @janelydon.bsky.social reexamines the relationship between Jeremy Bentham and Edward Gibbon Wakefield through the lens of one of Bentham’s last projects: “Colonization Company Proposal” (1831)

4 months ago 6 2 0 0
The Bear in the Room and the Civilizing Process | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core The Bear in the Room and the Civilizing Process

Now on FirstView: The bear in the room and the civilizing process? Ferenc Laczo @ferenclaczo.bsky.social discusses the historical narratives of “the West” and “Europe” in his review essay of Georgios Varouxakis’s The West: The History of an Idea and Anthony Pagden’s The Pursuit of Europe: A History

5 months ago 1 0 0 0
Field Work | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core Field Work

Now on FirstView: Timothy Scott Johnson interrogates the relationship between empire, decolonization, and sociology in France in his review essay of George Steinmetz’s The Colonial Origins of Modern Social Thought and Amín Pérez’s Bourdieu and Sayad against Empire

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The Political Unbound: Conservative Arab Thought after Islam | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core The Political Unbound: Conservative Arab Thought after Islam

Now on FirstView: Conservative Arab thought after Islam? Ahmed Dailami reconstructs the intellectual history of the Arab right through the work of philosopher Mohammed Jaber al-Ansari in the late 20th century

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The “Woman’s Seed”: Immediate Abolitionism’s Intellectual Mothers | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core The “Woman’s Seed”: Immediate Abolitionism’s Intellectual Mothers

Now on FirstView: The “Woman’s Seed”? Ariane Viktoria Fichtl @threadofariane.bsky.social analyzes the abolitionist cognitive tool “mental metempsychosis” that challenged the concept of the heritability of slavery and was at the heart of immediate abolitionism in Britain

5 months ago 1 1 0 0
William Godwin on Democracy: The Time-Regime of Political Thought in the Age of Revolutions | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core William Godwin on Democracy: The Time-Regime of Political Thought in the Age of Revolutions

Now on FirstView: William Godwin as a democrat? Minchul Kim analyzes Godwin’s ideas of democracy and the time-regime of European political thought in the Age of Revolutions

5 months ago 5 1 0 0
WHERE IS AMERICA IN THE REPUBLIC OF LETTERS?* | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core WHERE IS AMERICA IN THE REPUBLIC OF LETTERS?* - Volume 9 Issue 3

From MIH Archives: Where is British America in the Republic of Letters? Caroline Winterer explores the prospects and limits of digitally mapping the republic of letters and reframing our textual archive in spatial dimensions

5 months ago 2 1 1 0
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Governing the Miracle | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core Governing the Miracle

Now on FirstView: Governing the Miracle? Julia Nordblad @julianordblad.bsky.social discusses the consequences of planetary perspective for political thought in her review essay of Blake and Gilman’s Children of a Modest Star and Alyssa Battistoni’s Free Gifts: Capitalism and the Politics of Nature

6 months ago 5 2 0 0
Communication Theology, the Decolonization of Information, and the Africanization of Journalism, 1960–1990 | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core Communication Theology, the Decolonization of Information, and the Africanization of Journalism, 1960–1990

Now on FirstView: Ismay Milford examines communication theology, the decolonization of information, and the Africanization of journalism, 1960–1990

6 months ago 0 1 0 0
British Legal Opinion about Immigration and Sovereignty, 1833–1906 | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core British Legal Opinion about Immigration and Sovereignty, 1833–1906

Now on FirstView: The Crown's prerogative? Duncan Wallace examines British legal opinion about immigration and sovereignty, 1833–1906

6 months ago 3 0 0 0
Losing Control of Tocqueville: J. P. Mayer and the Genesis of Gallimard’s Oeuvres complètes d’Alexis de Tocqueville | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core Losing Control of Tocqueville: J. P. Mayer and the Genesis of Gallimard’s Oeuvres complètes d’Alexis de Tocqueville

Now on FirstView: Losing Control of Tocqueville? Peter Madill and Richard Whatmore examine Jacob Peter Mayer and the genesis of Gallimard’s Oeuvres complètes d’Alexis de Tocqueville

6 months ago 1 1 0 0
The Social Organization of Property: The Homeownership System, Managed Hierarchy, and the Challenge of Social Selfhood in the Early Twentieth-Century United States | Modern Intellectual History | Camb... The Social Organization of Property: The Homeownership System, Managed Hierarchy, and the Challenge of Social Selfhood in the Early Twentieth-Century United States

Now on FirstView: An intellectual history of homeownership? Samuel Zipp analyzes “social property,” managed hierarchy, and the challenge of social selfhood in the early 20th-century U.S.

6 months ago 4 0 0 0
Situating Bjørn Lomborg in the History of Climate Politics: The Turn from Markets to Planning in Promethean Discourse | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core Situating Bjørn Lomborg in the History of Climate Politics: The Turn from Markets to Planning in Promethean Discourse

Now on FirstView: From markets to planning in promethean discourse? Niklas Olsen and Rasmus Skov Andersen situate the work of famous “skeptical environmentalist” Bjørn Lomborg in current climate and environmental debates bit.ly/486IPqq

6 months ago 1 0 0 0
From Postcolonial to Muslim Worlds: The Metamorphosis of Egalitarian Thought in Gamal al-Banna’s Works | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core From Postcolonial to Muslim Worlds: The Metamorphosis of Egalitarian Thought in Gamal al-Banna’s Works

From Postcolonial to Muslim Worlds? Xiaoyue Yasin Li examines the egalitarian ideas and practices of Gamal al-Banna (1920–2013) during Egypt’s transition from postcolonial socialism to neoliberal Islamic revival

6 months ago 1 0 0 0
Does Economic Nationalism Have a Philosophy? | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core Does Economic Nationalism Have a Philosophy?

Now on FirstView: Does economic nationalism have a philosophy? Stefan Link engages with this question in his review essay of Suesse Marvin’s The Nationalist Dilemma: A Global History of Economic Nationalism and Helleiner Eric’s The Neomercantilists: A Global Intellectual History

6 months ago 2 1 0 0
Nonviolence Meets Direct Action: A Transnational Encounter of the Interwar Years | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core Nonviolence Meets Direct Action: A Transnational Encounter of the Interwar Years

Now on FirstView: Direct action as radical politics? Sean Scalmer analyzes the transnational histories of direct action and of nonviolence drawing attention to previously submerged debates of the radical interwar left

6 months ago 3 0 0 1
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Republican Revivals | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core Republican Revivals

Now on FirstView: Republican revivals? Anton Jäger reflects on the history of republicanism in his review essay of Quentin Skinner’s Liberty as Independence and Bruno Leipold’s @brunoleipold.com Citizen Marx

7 months ago 9 7 0 1
The Figurative Foundations of Rousseau's Politics | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core The Figurative Foundations of Rousseau's Politics - Volume 20 Issue 1

From MIH Archives: Emma Planinc examines the foundations of Rousseau’s political languages: figurative, imagistic, and modeled on ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs

7 months ago 2 0 0 0